Seasons of Gold LIVES!

Hear ye! Hear ye! New e-book published!Announcement

Seasons of Gold selected haiku & senryu, is now live on Amazon and I’m “over the moon.” Inserting the images has given me grief galore, but I’ve just viewed a copy on our tablet — and it looks great. Now to tell the world, “My e-book is ready for you!” A great way to celebrate National Poetry Month.
Check it out here: Link to Amazon.com

Seasons of Gold: selected haiku & senryu by [Goodnough, Christine]

 

17 thoughts on “Seasons of Gold LIVES!

  1. It looks great Christine. Well done.

    Do I see that you’ve done a sort of linked trail of haiku from a picture prompt – one leading to the next and so on? A kind of organic progression?

    I’d be most curious to know how you managed the process with pictures. I’d thought to use some, but probably not in Kindle because I felt it would be more complicated than I could cope with.

    How did you manage? (I know it could be a long answer, so don’t feel you need to dive too deep. It’s just a pointed interest of mine.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. As to your first question, I found suitable pictures for the verse right under or above. A lot of these I’d used when I initially posted the verse on my blog, so they went in the book. But most pages are sort-of topical or seasonal.

      How I managed the pictures? Ah! I didn’t want to do my poems centered; I wanted them to be left-hand justified. If I’d been working with MSWord instead of WordPerfect, I could have done this, as there are oodles of “How-to” videos on You tube explaining how to insert pictures in a Word file so they’ll transfer to Kindle Create.

      In my first attempt, I inserted them directly into Kindle Create — just a click. However, they wrapped around the poem—or rather shoved one or two verses to the left of the image. I didn’t want this, so I hit the space bar. Sadly, when the book was published, though it looked okay in the previewer, on my phone I saw a lot of blank spaces under the images. 😦

      I tried inserting them into my WordPerfect file and they did transfer when I converted my file to a Word doc — but once in KC they were messed up, colours & lines blurred. So finally I did what was easiest: it’s no problem to insert images in KC if you want to center everything. 😉 Or, let the text wrap around the images. So I centered all my poems and it all worked.

      I had no problem when I did Andrew’s book, because I’d resized all my images to max. 650 pixels in width. I inserted them directly into KC and they fit and filled the screen just right so the text naturally fell underneath. But I didn’t want such large images for my haiku verses.

      This has definitely been a learning process! I’ll take some comfort if my “education” can help you somehow. 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Wow. I’m a little terrified of the whole idea of pictures. I have probably 4 completed manuscripts that have pictures I’d like to use, but I worry about process, I worry about size of the document and I worry about coordinating paperback and ebook. Just those few things.

        Best luck with the book, Christine, it looks a cracker.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Hey, if I can… 😉
        However, I am considering installing MS word as my processor, if I want to do much more of this. Or maybe borrowing my son-in-law’s computer while he’s at work.
        I’m so pleased with the cover design work he did. He may dig holes in the day, but he morphs into a graphic designer when I need another cover. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Ha! Thanks for all your comments and encouragement.
        Mess around with your image editor and you’ll get the hang of it. And they’re still selling WordPerfect, by the way. I keep getting ads to buy the latest upgrade. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you. I hope a lot of readers will enjoy my verses. I did it for my own satisfaction as well, to gather my verses together in one book. I was aiming for 80, but kept adding “to fill in here and there,” so now there are 115!

      Like

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